Scans & Tests Overview Flashcards

1
Q

List 3 types of angiography

A
  • MRI angiography
  • CT angiography
  • Catheter angiography
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2
Q

Describe MRI angiography

What it images?
What it looks for?
Indications for its use?

A

Injected with dye, get and MRI scan

Looks for:

  • stenosis
  • occlusions
  • aneurysms
  • other abnormalities

Indcations:

  • Ischaemic heart disease
  • Stroke
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3
Q

Describe CT angiography

A

Injected with dye, get and CT scan

Very good anatomical detail

Less resolution than angiograms

Can cause contrast allergy and nephropathy

Looks for:

  • stenosis
  • occlusions
  • aneurysms
  • other abnormalities

Indcations:

  • Ischaemic heart disease with non-typical presentation
  • Stroke (cerebral and carotid scans)
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4
Q

Describe catheter angiography

A

Cateter goes to correct area via your arteries, injects dye, xray is taken

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5
Q

Describe Duplex Ultrasound

A

Ultrasound scan that scan tell movement relative to the scanner

Indcations:

  • Peripheral arterial disease
  • Peripheral venous disease
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6
Q

Describe ultrasound scanning

A

Indcations:

- Abdominal aortic aneurysm (but can’t detect rupture)

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7
Q

Describe perfusion scanning

A

Nuclear medicine test

Shows vessel occlusion

Indicated for non-acute ischaemic heart disease if:

  • exercise ECG not possible
  • exercise ECG negative despite classic presentation
  • exercise ECG is ambiguous
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8
Q

List relevant blood tests

A
  • Glucose
  • LDL
  • HDL
  • Triglyceride
  • Thrombophilia screen
  • Creatine kinase
  • Troponin I and T
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9
Q

List different types of ECG

A
  • Standard 12 lead ECG
  • Exercise (stress test) ECG
  • 24 hour monitoring ECG
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10
Q

Describe the ABPI and its use in diagnosing peripheral vascular disease

A

ABPI = Ankle-Brachial Pressure Index

ABPI = (Ankle pressure)/(brachial pressure)

Normal		= 0.9 - 1.2
Claudication	= 0.4 - 0.85 
Severe		= 0 – 0.4
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11
Q

What is the required level of troponin I and T to diagnose an MI?

A

99th percentile

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12
Q

Why are troponin I and T blood tests good for MI diagnosis?

A
  • Specific to heart muscle
  • Their amount indicates the extent of damage
  • The increase lasts from 4-6 hours after infarct to ~7 days after, thus they can be used to detect a previous MI
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13
Q

Does a troponin T and I increase = an MI

Why?

A

No, as other things can cause an troponin rise

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14
Q

List things that can lead to an increase of T and I troponins

A

STEMI
NSTEMI

Chronic heart failure
Massive PE
Hypertensive crisis
Sepsis
Stroke/TIA
Pericarditis and Myocarditis
Post Arrhythmia
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15
Q

What are BNP and NT-pro-BNP?

What are they used to diagnose?

A

BNP = Brain Natriuretic Peptide

NT-pro-BNP = the precursor to BNP

used to diagnose heart failure

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16
Q

Describe an echocardiogram

Indications?

Looks for?

A

Ultrasound of the heart

Indcations:

  • Cardiac thrombus
  • Heart valve deformities
  • Heart deformities
  • Hemopericardium (or other excess pericardial fluid)

Looks for:

  • Chamber size
  • ventricle function
  • ejection fraction
  • valve disease
  • pericardial disease
  • impaired filling
  • wall abnormalities (e.g. post MI)
17
Q

Describe cardiac MRI

A

Used in heart failure

To see:

  • left ventricle wall thickness
  • the amount of scarring (viable myocardium)
18
Q

What are the 2 types of echocardiogram?

When would you use each type?

A

Transthoracic echocardiogram (TTE):

  • non-invasive
  • like a regular ultrasound
  • doesn’t work well with some lung diseases (e.g. COPD)

Transoesophageal echocardiogram (TEE):

  • via a probe that goes down the oesophagus
  • used if TTE won’t give good results
19
Q

Describe an electrophysiological study

A

An arrhythmia is deliberately triggered in the heart so that its mechanism and pathway can be studied

Is an invasive procedure

You can treat the arrhythmia, via ablation of accessory pathways, as part of the same procedure